For The Trentonian/ JOHN BLAINE
Rider's Danny Stewart tires to fight through two Stony Brook defenders on his way to the basket. Stewart bounced back from a poor performance against the Seawolves to lead the Broncs with 18 points in the win over Monmouth.

LAWRENCEVILLE — Danny Stewart knew he had to play better. There wasn’t really that much more to it.

Stewart, who scored just five points in the loss against Stony Brook, was called out by coach Kevin Baggett in the postgame press conference for not doing enough.

He responded the best way possible.

“I challenge myself,” said Stewart, who scored a game-high 18 points as Rider held on to beat Monmouth Saturday afternoon. “I had a bad game against Stony Brook. We need a post presence, and I felt like, if we’re going to win, we need to score in the paint.”

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The junior from Philadelphia delivered eight straight points during a stretch of the second half when the Broncs we’re scrapping to stay in front of the Hawks, who erased a 15-point halftime deficit.

“I felt like I had a mismatch,” said Stewart, who raised his average to 11.3 points per game. “I didn’t care if the guy was bigger than me because I could take it to the basket, get fouled and score. I just didn’t care. I needed to score and give my team a cushion.”

Stewart’s performance picked up the slack for leading scorer Nurideen Lindsey, who got in foul trouble and finished with just seven points.

“We got Danny to play how we believe Danny can play,” said Lindsey, who still managed to knock down 3 of 4 clutch free throws. “He picked it up big time. (Saturday) he was the player we know he can be all year.”

Lindsey also praised guard Zedric Sadler. The freshman blocked a 3-point attempt that would have given Monmouth the lead with less than a minute to go.

“There are a lot of things expected out of him,” Lindsey said. “There’s a lot of pressure on him and I think he picked it up.”

Sadler said he didn’t feel the pressure of being on the floor in crunch time. But he did acknowledge that it’s going to help him later in the year.

“It gets me that experience,” he said.

Baggett also knows he’s going to be counting on youngsters like Sadler.

“I think they can only get better from it,” the coach said. “These guys are growing as it is. It’s only three games in, but they’re understanding that every team is going to come at you and give you their best punch.”

Rider (2-1) begins a four-game road trip Monday night with a chance to upset an SEC opponent when it faces South Carolina (2-0).

About the Author

Kyle Franko covers college and high school sports at the Trentonian. He is a Rutgers grad, avid football -- the European variety -- fan and part-time pick-up basketball player. Reach the author at kfranko@trentonian.com
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